Interview skills and tips for jobseekers: A roundup

Naturejobs collects some of our favourite posts on interviews.

Your interview skills will play a huge part in whether you win an offer for that coveted job. But even if you’re not job-hunting, you’ll need those skills in other settings – if you’re applying to graduate school, interviewing for a postdoctoral research post, aiming to get into a particular investigator’s lab, hoping to join a collaboration.

Practice makes perfect, it’s true, but it helps to know a few ground rules and tips if you haven’t gotten to the ‘perfect’ stage yet. Here’s a look at some ways we’ve outlined to get you in the door you want.

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Revitalising the scientific research conference

Many biomedical research conferences rehash old ideas rather than define key challenges. The problem is tied to fundamental issues in the research culture.

Guest contributors David Rubenson and Paul Salvaterra

 

“Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?”

“That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,” said the Cat.

“I don’t much care where—” said Alice.

“Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,” said the Cat.

Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

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Five factors to consider when choosing your PhD

Mark Maslin and Kevin Fowler provide some advice on what to look for in a modern PhD programme.

Guest contributors Mark Maslin and Kevin Fowler

Choosing to undertake a PhD is a daunting task. This is not helped by the common misperception that studying for a PhD is a lonely struggle to prove you’re worthy of academia: a Darwinian process where only the fittest, strongest and luckiest survive.

{credit}Claire Asher{/credit}

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How to answer: Why do you want to work for us?

We tackle another classic this week. Being genuine – and understanding the question – is key.

This is another one of those wholly overused interview questions that still get thrown around time and again by employers who are hoping to trip the odd candidate up. When faced with this, it’s tempting to be flippant. A legitimate – but wrong – answer would be “I need to pay the rent.” This isn’t going to do you any favours.

{credit}iStockphoto/Thinkstock{/credit}

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Finding job satisfaction in high performance computing

Cristiano Malossi first came to IBM Laboratory in Zurich, Switzerland as a postdoc and was then promoted to researcher. He has applied his mathematical simulation skills to a variety of projects, specializing in ‘cognitive technologies’ capable of powerful algorithms.

 

{credit}IBM Research{/credit}

Tell me about some of your work at IBM.

I started on a project for energy-aware computing. The goal here was not to boost operations per second but to make a more efficient use of computational resources for the same result but at a lower power per energy cost. Very soon I got exposed to many other projects, which span deep learning, graph analytics, and high-performance computing. Whatever the assignment is, you must adapt what you know, put together experience from another fields, and at the same time, find a new way to advance the problem. You never get tired of it, every day you learn something new. Continue reading

We look back at the Naturejobs career expo London, 2014

With Naturejobs career expos coming in hot, in San Francisco and Boston, we take a look back at the 2014 expo in London.

https://youtu.be/LRzT6Z5L3uE

You can check out our upcoming expos, in San Francisco, Boston, London and Düsseldorf, here.

Parent, carer… #AndAScientist

Researchers can thrive whilst combining their career with life outside the lab, says Ottoline Leyser.

{credit}Ottoline Leyser{/credit}

Guest contributor Ottoline Leyser.

Science needs diversity.  Solving complex problems is more likely if there are diverse people, bringing diverse perspectives and diverse skills to bear on them. The imaginative and interesting people science needs find inspiration in the most unexpected places – both inside and outside the lab; in their personal and family lives and their other responsibilities and commitments.

Working environments that embrace diversity are exciting and creative. They can also be challenging and uncomfortable. While it may be reassuring to work with people who agree with you all day long, you’re much less likely to come up with anything new. It’s unfortunate that such a large part of science is done by a homogenous group of people who all look like each other.  This state of affairs is maintained in part by the positive feedback that comes from unconscious bias, where appointments and promotion committees disproportionately select people similar to themselves. Continue reading

Juggling science and motherhood

Balancing life inside and outside the lab is not always easy, but it’s possible to be a parent, a carer, #AndAScientist, says Seralynne Vann.

Guest contributor Seralynne Vann.

 

I have always had a love of science and always knew I wanted to be a mother. I’ve managed to combine a career in neuroscience with motherhood although at a numerous points over the years I questioned whether I would be able to have either, let alone both.

{credit}Seralynne Vann{/credit}

 

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Women in physics: personal perspectives

Sarah-Jane Lonsdale speaks to two senior female scientists in industry about their career paths

Guest contributor Sarah-Jane Lonsdale

The Institute of Physics ran an event in November 2015 targeted at PhD students and early career researchers on “Taking Control of your Career as a Female Physicist”. After the event, I spoke with Dr Valerie Berryman-Bousquet, R&D Manager at SHARP Laboratories, and Dr Jenny Wooldridge, Associate Programme Manager at the National Physical Laboratory, about their career paths in industry. After our first discussion, we continued our conversation.

Sarah-Jane Lonsdale

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Most read on Naturejobs: March 2016

With one quarter of the year done already, we look back at your favourite posts from last month. We’ll get right to it.

Answering the most-feared interview question is high on everyone’s mind. Our guide to expressing your greatest weakness in a positive way is on the leader board as the most read piece on Naturejobs this month. Glad you liked it!

Chris Woolston talked us through the best make-up for a lab in group dynamics: a lab of their own in March. Your research group is important, and finding the right balance between different members of staff may just tip you into academic success. Continue reading